AXIOMATIC CONSTRUCTION OF THE TANGENT BUNDLE IN SYNTHETIC DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY

Synthetic differential geometry (SDG) is a reformulation of differential geometry based on an axiom that is synthetic in nature, in the sense that it relates to geometric objects and the relations between those objects, such that a rigorous calculus that incorporates nilpotent infinitesimals can...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sebastian, Ian
Format: Final Project
Language:Indonesia
Online Access:https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/71908
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Institut Teknologi Bandung
Language: Indonesia
id id-itb.:71908
spelling id-itb.:719082023-02-28T08:54:47ZAXIOMATIC CONSTRUCTION OF THE TANGENT BUNDLE IN SYNTHETIC DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY Sebastian, Ian Indonesia Final Project synthetic differential geometry, Kock-Lawvere axiom, infinitesimal linearity. INSTITUT TEKNOLOGI BANDUNG https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/71908 Synthetic differential geometry (SDG) is a reformulation of differential geometry based on an axiom that is synthetic in nature, in the sense that it relates to geometric objects and the relations between those objects, such that a rigorous calculus that incorporates nilpotent infinitesimals can be done. As a basic assumption, we assume the existence of a basic continuum object R which obeys a principle we call the Microaffineness Principle, which states that every curve can be seen as a composition of microstraight lines, which is somewhat in line with the classical understanding of the continuum, an ideal object on which true continuous variation is possible. To be exact, we assume that R obeys the Kock-Lawvere axiom, which states that all functions from the domain D = {d ? R : d2 = 0} to R can be uniquely described as an affine function. Having been allowed to work with infinitesimal elements explicitly, we are now able to carry on rigorous constructions of geometric objects in a more general manner that better accomodates the geometric intuition we might naturally have of the object, through arguing with infinitesimal elements. However, to work with this principle, we have to sacrifice the universality of the Law of Excluded Middle, a principle of logic which states that P ?¬P always holds for all propositions P. A significant consequence of this is the loss of our ability to use non-constructive arguments of proof, particularly the non-constructive version of the reductio ad absurdum argument. In this Thesis, we will examine the benefits we gain from this sacrifice. text
institution Institut Teknologi Bandung
building Institut Teknologi Bandung Library
continent Asia
country Indonesia
Indonesia
content_provider Institut Teknologi Bandung
collection Digital ITB
language Indonesia
description Synthetic differential geometry (SDG) is a reformulation of differential geometry based on an axiom that is synthetic in nature, in the sense that it relates to geometric objects and the relations between those objects, such that a rigorous calculus that incorporates nilpotent infinitesimals can be done. As a basic assumption, we assume the existence of a basic continuum object R which obeys a principle we call the Microaffineness Principle, which states that every curve can be seen as a composition of microstraight lines, which is somewhat in line with the classical understanding of the continuum, an ideal object on which true continuous variation is possible. To be exact, we assume that R obeys the Kock-Lawvere axiom, which states that all functions from the domain D = {d ? R : d2 = 0} to R can be uniquely described as an affine function. Having been allowed to work with infinitesimal elements explicitly, we are now able to carry on rigorous constructions of geometric objects in a more general manner that better accomodates the geometric intuition we might naturally have of the object, through arguing with infinitesimal elements. However, to work with this principle, we have to sacrifice the universality of the Law of Excluded Middle, a principle of logic which states that P ?¬P always holds for all propositions P. A significant consequence of this is the loss of our ability to use non-constructive arguments of proof, particularly the non-constructive version of the reductio ad absurdum argument. In this Thesis, we will examine the benefits we gain from this sacrifice.
format Final Project
author Sebastian, Ian
spellingShingle Sebastian, Ian
AXIOMATIC CONSTRUCTION OF THE TANGENT BUNDLE IN SYNTHETIC DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY
author_facet Sebastian, Ian
author_sort Sebastian, Ian
title AXIOMATIC CONSTRUCTION OF THE TANGENT BUNDLE IN SYNTHETIC DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY
title_short AXIOMATIC CONSTRUCTION OF THE TANGENT BUNDLE IN SYNTHETIC DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY
title_full AXIOMATIC CONSTRUCTION OF THE TANGENT BUNDLE IN SYNTHETIC DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY
title_fullStr AXIOMATIC CONSTRUCTION OF THE TANGENT BUNDLE IN SYNTHETIC DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY
title_full_unstemmed AXIOMATIC CONSTRUCTION OF THE TANGENT BUNDLE IN SYNTHETIC DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY
title_sort axiomatic construction of the tangent bundle in synthetic differential geometry
url https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/71908
_version_ 1822006712632082432